Reverse Engineering an MPEG Driver
An anonymous reader writes "Following on from the recent spate of reverse engineering articles, there is an interesting summary of the reverse engineering of a binary only Linux driver.
The driver is for the integrated MPEG decoder on VIA's popular EPIA-M boards. At the moment VIA has not publicly released the source code for the MPEG chipset on these boards and will only make the code available under NDA saying that "Typically, only requests from companies developing product for sale will be approved."
As a result this is holding back development of open source tools (e.g. xine, mplayer, vdr) that would be able to make use of the interesting hardware on these boards."
But does it ru-- :)
Nevermind, no points to spare
Let's harass them for not releasing the code, reverse engineer it and post it everywhere, until they get mad and discontinue Linux driver development altogether! Then xine and mplayer will work GREAT!
From the article:
Oh yeah. Much more readable.
"A great democracy must be progressive or it will soon cease to be a great democracy." --Theodore Roosevelt
"You honestly think that simply living in Italy is enough to protect him? Have we learned nothing from reading Slashdot?"
I've learned that paranoia is an epidemic.
Ironically, the sources to that "Reverse Engineering Compiler" are not available in the public domain...
I.O.U One Sig.
reverse "engineering"?
is that what it's called now?
back in the day, i used to just double click on the mpeg clip on my computer, and all you could see were "reverse cowgirls". whatever these "engineers" (or pr0nstars as we used to call them) are doing is just great. My "intellectual property" is now as WIDE-OPEN as open source for you!
ackk kids.... when do they ever use the proper symmentics.. (old man like me cant spell...)
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